Chaucer's Fabliaux as Analogues, Volume 1 ;Volume 19Leuven University Press, 1991 - 290 pages The presence of so many fabliaux in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is intriguing in its own right, given the fact that there are no real fabliaux in Middle English befor Chaucer. But these stories are also interesting as instances of a concept and practice thas has received little critical attention so far, namely 'analogy', the writing and, above all, recognition of 'similar' stories. How to account for the literary practice that enables us to perceive stories as similar, c.q. analogous? This original study sets out to explore this phenomenon, first tentatively vis-?)vis other terms and practices (Translation, Borrowing, Adaptation, Version) and then, in the major part of the book, in a pragmatic-structuralist analysis of four salient components of narrative--Plot, Character, Thematics, and Genre--each illustrated with examples taken from Chaucer's fabliaux and their analogues in various European languages.In each of the four chapters the key-issue is Categorisation and Hertog traces its evolution and usefulness a a concept from Wittgenstein's family resemblances' and Zadeh's 'fuzzy set theory' to E. Rosch's Prototype theory. The conclusion draws attention to two aspects which set Chaucer's fabliaux very much apart from the other analogues: their contextuality within the polylogue of the Canterbury Tales, and secondly, their explicit intertextuality which invites us to look anew at the assumptions of traditional source-criticism. The study ends with some theoretical reflections on analogy and an attempt at definition.The book will interest not only Chaucerians and other medievalists but also scholars in literarry theory and interpretation. |
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... Woman is Satan and the Suitor the Vanity of the World ; the dog is the unwarranted Hope for a long life ; and of a ' simple ' moralization in the Fasciculus Morum , where the story is used as an illustration of the evil suggestions one ...
... woman . One day the couple went into the country . The fruits growing along the roadside were so appetizing that the old man was won over . The woman then said : " Husband , I want you to help me climb [ this tree ] . " She climbed up ...
... woman ? ” “ I'm payin promised in order to get your sight back . " " Well , go ahead ! Why didn't for me sooner ? " what I do it " You see , Peter , how easily she got away with it . " ( Wentersdorf , 1967 italics mine . Further ...
... woman , no matter how easy in virtue , Nor how often she has whored about , Will yet be chaste and a maiden If she has this on her finger in the morning . " ( 11.217-220 ) , and quickly she hands him the key ! In RvT no ring , no talk ...
... woman's needs , both sexual and material7 . It is important to realize that each stereotype is first of all defined by a ' representativeness structure ' , rather than a cognitive model ( Lakoff , 1987 , 82 ) : that is , the closer the ...